Dr. Hiral Tipirneni has dedicated her life to serving her community, solving problems, and improving lives. She’s served the Phoenix area for more than 20 years as an emergency room physician, cancer research advocate and, most recently, on the board of directors of the Maricopa Health Foundation, which supports the county’s public health care delivery system.

Hiral came to America from India with her family at the age of three. Her parents were seeking the American dream because they knew the United States was a place where, if you worked hard and lived by the rules of democracy, you could be successful no matter where you came from.

Yes, America contributed massively, first through lend-lease, then through boots on the ground in addition to that.

Yes, Russia, or better the USSR, had suffered the most through the war and it was their ability to hold the German advance that ultimatively changed the tide of the war in Europe.

Yes, the British did a pretty good job at decyphering Enigma. What was more important though was their defense of Africa and them holding out against Germany while being alone throughout 1940-1941. If they had surrendered, who could blame them during that specific period?

Why is it inaccurate? Well, first of all it is eurocentric. How the Chinese suffered, how almost all of South East Asia suffered and how much the US had to do in the Pacific is completly thrown out of the window. Germany was just one of two major threads to the world and it was the US who focused on one of them nearly alone.

To add to that, what about the Commonwealth? Canada, Australia, India and New Zealand as well contributed to the war, they send manpower and resources which helped the Brits to survive the onslaught of the Axis. All the american gear would've been useless if it hadn't been used by men of these countries, the UK alone wouldn't had prevailed.

It also disregards the resolve of the Poles, Czechs, Ukrainians, French, Dutch and Belgian people who fought against either their direct occupiers or formed military formations in exile, fighting against the Axis as well.

It disregards the real position of Germany and Japan. Neither country could actually hope to really win the war. Yes, they might have settled for treaties that would've given them huge chunks of territory, but it wouldn't have been peace over night. The people would've still resisted and we would've seen a larger scale Vietnam War in Europe and most party of Asia.

So, to sum up, it is a statement that is so broad that you can't dismiss it completly. But due to this broadness it is highly inaccurate.

I left my bike outside my house one day when I was young, we lived in a decent suburban neighborhood, went to put it away and found someone had taken my bike and replaced it with a crappy bike. Told my dad what happened and we decided to get in the car and drive around the neighborhood in the chance that whoever took it was still nearby. As we're driving around I look down a side street and see a group of kids on bikes, I point this out to my dad and he turns the car around and heads down the side street. As we pull up to the 3 kids on bikes I tell my dad that one of them is my bike, "what are you doing with my son's bike" my dad yells as his face turns red. The three kids take off on their bikes down the road, and my dad starts driving right behind them. They jump the curb and start riding down the sidewalk on the left side of the road, my dad does the same, driving down the sidewalk while bearing down on these bikers. One biker drops a bike and runs into the woods next to the sidewalk, another drops my bike and flees into the woods, and finally the last one takes his bike with him into the woods. I point out to my dad that they dropped my bike, we go back to it and load it into the car. Returned home in time to tell the police all about it. No clue what happened with the first bike they dropped or the bike they left at my house.

TL;DR

Chased down a bike thief in a car and almost ran them over before they dropped my bike.